Injunction unlikely to be enforcedMobile phones News By Chris Smith Thursday at 20:55 UTC | Tell us what you think [ 3 comments ]
Tweet Slide-to-unlock is becoming a key feature of the patent warsA German court has found that Motorola has infringed on Apple's patented slide-to-unlock technology with its Android smartphones.
The court victory, which is being touted as "a big win for Apple over Android," means Cupertino, in theory, has an injunction on Motorola smartphone sales in Germany.
The case relates to patent EP1964022, which covers the act of unlocking a touchscreen display by swiping your finger from one area of the screen to another.
Apple owns the patent, which it has used on iOS devices since the first iPhone.
New design already implementedHowever, Motorola plans to appeal the verdict and says that it has already has an alternative phone unlock method in place, so expects no ban to ever come into effect.
A Moto spokeswoman said: "Today's ruling in the patent litigation brought by Apple in Munich, Germany, concerns a software feature related to phone unlocking in select Motorola devices sold in Germany.
"Motorola has implemented a new design for the feature. Therefore, we expect no impact on current supply or future sales."
Yet more lawsuitsHowever, with the appeals and counter appeals set to rumble on, the Munich victory will probably open the door for Apple to challenge more manufacturers carrying the Android operating system and using slide-to-unlock.
Motorola may also become the chief target of Apple's legal wrath once it is officially acquired by Google.
Patent expert Florien Mueller told the BBC: "[This is a] very significant win for Apple against Android.
"After Google closes the acquisition of Motorola Mobility, the Apple-Motorola Mobility dispute will soon gain importance transcending that of the global battle with Samsung," he added.
Via: BBC News Tags: Apple, Motorola, iPhone, iPad, slide-to-unlock, AndroidTweetreddit!Stumbleupon Your comments (3) Click to add a new commentweedymuff3. Apple must be lining the courts in germany with lots of pocket money as they seem to get away with anything there!
Alert a moderatorunlixes2. Yeah, this is one of the most nauseating patents. Especially since the Motorola one was, apparently, sliding an icon out of a circle, rather than following a set path. I don't understand how these patents are allowed to stand, let alone be upheld like this.
Luckily, they're easy enough to get around so, again, I think the idea that this means Android is in a noose is overstated.
Alert a moderatorsirspoon1. can someone explain why they are allowed to patent something that firstly already existed before hand, and secondly, is blindingly obvious (basically use an interface to issue a command to a gadget) I just don't get it.
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